A letter to a member of Parliament, containing a proposal for bringing in a bill to revise, amend or repeal certain obsolete statues commonly called the ten commandments
A letter to a member of Parliament, containing a proposal for bringing in a bill to revise, amend or repeal certain obsolete statues commonly called the ten commandments
Book digitized by Google from the library of Oxford University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb.
"This tract, on its first appearance, was generally ascribed to Dean Swift. It is included in the second volume of Hildrop's Miscellaneous works, published by himself in 1754."--Halkett & Laing. Dict. of the anon. and pseud. lit. of Gt. Brit